LED Online Seminar 2017 - Working Group 5
--> Back to working group overview
Dear working group members. This is your group page and you will be completing the template gradually as we move through the seminar. Good luck and enjoy your collaboration!
Assignment 1 - Reading and Synthesizing Core Terminology
- You can read more details about this assignment here
- Readings are accessible via the resources page
Step 1: Your Landscape Democracy Manifestoes
-
Sara's manifesto
-
Eugenia's manifesto
-
Julian's manifesto 1
-
Julian's manifesto 2
-
Mohamadreza's manifesto
-
Tatiana's manifesto
Step 2: Define your readings
- Please add your readings selection for the terminology exercise before April 12:
A: Landscape and Democracy - Mapping the Terrain
- The European Landscape Convention
Landscape Concepts:
- Lynch, Kevin. (1960): The Image of the City, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press (Eugenia Valerio)
European Council of Spatial Planners
- European Charter on Participatory Democracy (under consultation)
B: Concepts of Participation
- Hester, Randolph (1999): A Refrain with a View
- Gaventa, John: The Powerful, the Powerless, and the Experts (Julian Kurz)
C: Community and Identity
D: Designing
- Salgado, Mariana, et al. (2015): Designing with Immigrants (Eugenia Valerio)
E: Communicating a Vision
Steps 3 and 4: Concepts Selection and definition
- Each group member selects three relevant concepts derived from his/her readings and synthesize them/publish them on the wiki by April 30, 2017
- Group members reflect within their groups and define their chosen concepts into a shared definition to be posted on the wiki by May 10, 2017.
- Other group members will be able to comment on the definitions until May 20, 2017
Concepts and definitions
Author 1:
- Concept 1
- add you definition here with 2-3 concise sentences. Do not copy paste text from others, use your own words. Make reference to resources used.
- Concept 2
- .....
- Concept 3
- ....
Author 2:
- ......
- .......
- .......
Author 3:
- ......
- .......
- .......
Author 4:
- ......
- .......
- .......
Step 5: Reflection
- Please write, as a group, a 250 words reflection on your discourse and document it here
Step 6: Revised manifestoes
- please look again at your initial manifestoes and update them with any new aspects/prespectives you have taken up during this seminar
-
xy's updated manifesto
-
xy's updated manifesto
-
xy's updated manifesto
-
xy's updated manifesto
-
xy's updated manifesto
Assignment 2 - Your Landscape Symbols
- You can read more details about this assignment here
Landscape Symbols - Mohamadreza Youssefi Matak
-
A clear visual border of forest and farmland separated by a path looks like fare to us. But as a matter of fact for ages, all species had been trying to own the majority of the natural landscape. Now it seems we as the most intellectual one could conquer all and determine the borders of ownership and shape the landscape by our own definition of the term "Democracy"! Welzheim, Germany
-
If we accept that definition for the term democracy is relative based on different periods of time, then this remained structure of the Roman watchtower could be a sign of democracy not for the people but for the empires. A built structure in natural landscape in order to make and keep the peace among rulers which has a reverse meaning for contemporary society today!48°53'11.5"N 9°38'02.0"E(Welzheim,Germany)
-
Access for all regardless of ethnic differences is one of the inevitable factors in landscape democracy which has been developed in various shapes from dirt road or track to railway. Indeed, it is a human right to have access the better places to benefit from the economic growth and social welfare.48°37'41.3"N 9°20'33.7"E(Nürtingen Bahnhof,Germany)
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
Landscape Symbols Julian Kurz
-
Hochgrad Germany
-
Wangen im Allgäu Germany
-
Lake Constance Germany
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
Landscape Symbols - Sara Caroline
-
Memorial Stadium UNL, Statue of footballer players outside the sports stadium in UNL, A symbol of the American culture and the Universit, Nebraska, Lincoln
-
Car, one of 263.6 million vehicles in the US, here in Lincoln streets, a country that was build around the car, 40.819106, -96.699841
-
Huge American houses, The campus “fraternities” and “sororities”, your house is a symbole of wealth in a Democracy- houses that occupy the space, 40.819106, -96.699841
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
Landscape Symbols Author 4
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
-
add a caption (one paragraph max) description of the symbolism, interpretation, as well as geo-location
Landscape Symbols Eugenia Valerio
-
Asinelli and Garisenda Towers, Bologna, Italy - 44°29'39.9"N 11°20'48.4"E, historical symbols of the city: ancient symbol of supremacy, now benchmark of the heart of the city
-
on the hills of Sasso Marconi (BO), Italy - nearby 44°26'19.1"N 11°12'25.1"E, the way it cultivates the vineyard is the symbol of our territory
-
Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Luca, Bologna, Italy - 44°28'44.9"N 11°17'53.2"E, from the Sanctuary you can see the whole city, and when you see the Sanctuary from the plain you know you're at home
-
Place Massena, Nice Ville, France - 43°41'47.2"N 7°16'14.4"E, conscious public art in a touristic seaside town
-
the port of Genova, Italy - from 44°24'12.6"N 8°55'52.2"E, unconscious industrial public art in a harbor city
-
caption: why did you select this case?
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (1)
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (2)
-
caption: who are the actors?
Your references:
- ...
- ...
Landscape Democracy Challenge 2
- Give a title to your challenge
-
caption: why did you select this case?
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (1)
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (2)
-
caption: who are the actors?
Your references:
- ...
- ...
Landscape Democracy Challenge 3
- Give a title to your challenge
-
caption: why did you select this case?
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (1)
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (2)
-
caption: who are the actors?
Your references:
- ...
- ...
Landscape Democracy Challenge 4
- Give a title to your challenge
-
caption: why did you select this case?
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (1)
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (2)
-
caption: who are the actors?
Your references:
- ...
- ...
Landscape Democracy Challenge 5
- Give a title to your challenge
-
caption: why did you select this case?
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (1)
-
caption: what is the issue/conflict (2)
-
caption: who are the actors?
Your references:
- ...
- ...
Assignment 5 - Your Democratic Change Process
- You can read more details about this assignment here
- After documenting and reflecting on your challenges you will continue jointly with one of these challenges and design a democratic change process
Your Democratic Change Process
- Add the title of your project
-
a power map identifying who is affected by the challenge and who is influencing it
-
Look at the various methods and tools available and think how they can be applied creatively. Think about the needs of different stakeholder groups - you may need a methodical mix to address them all. Illustrate graphically how these methods/tools might be applied in a short, medium and long-term perspective.
-
a scenario illustrating how these tools can be applied within a short, medium and long term perspective involving the groups you want to address, this should include a process timeline
Reflection
- Evaluate in the group how far your ideas either built on the theoretical frame that has been introduced to you during this seminar or react to this by filling a potential gap (approx 150 words)
Your references
- ....
- ....
- ....
- ....